Copyright Registration

Aboriginal Property is defined as:

Property belonging to an aboriginal national, aboriginal instrumentality, aboriginal government or business affiliate in contract with an Indigenous Government. There are international and domestic protections for this type of property written into instruments within the Aboriginal Government, host states sharing landscape and United Nations and other international bodies.

Aboriginal Peoples can now work with this instrumentality of the Aboriginal Republic of North America and the International Indigenous Society to achieve optimal international protection of their copyrights, patents and trademarks.

The rise of Indigenous communities, governments and business structure has caused the necessity of having a dimension to protect property. While UN States act as Trustees in many of their statutes for Indigenous Peoples and communities, this form of property protection allows for full autonomy for Indigenous governments and communities to implement self determination of their intellectual and tangible property rightsThis is an easy to use site that allows for full registration and quick turn around on Copyrights, Patents, and Trademarks.Instructions:1) Read about the differences between Copyrights, Trademarks, and Patents and decide which one you need2) Download the Application and Fill out3) Email the application to amaruxiali@gmail.com or to jurisprudence@aboriginalproperty.com. Send any questions you have via email. You can mail the application to our main mailing address4) Pay the fees at the Store or mail them in to:ARNA3000 Chestnut Street # 42083Philadelphia PA 19101

Copyrights:​A bundle of intangible rights granted by statute to the author or originator of certain literary or artistic productions, whereby, for a limited period, the exclusive privilege is given to that person (or to any party to whom he or she transfers ownership) to make copies of the same for publication and sale.

​A copyright is a legal device that gives the creator of a literary, artistic, musical, or other creative work the sole right to publish and sell that work. Copyright owners have the right to control the reproduction of their work, including the right to receive payment for that reproduction. An author may grant or sell those rights to others, including publishers or recording companies. Violation of a copyright is called infringement.

Copyright is distinct from other forms of creator protection such as Patents, which give inventors exclusive rights over use of their inventions, and Trademarks, which are legally protected words or symbols or certain other distinguishing features that represent products or services. Similarly, whereas a patent protects the application of an idea, and a trademark protects a device that indicates the provider of particular services or goods, copyright protects the expression of an idea. Whereas the operative notion in patents is novelty, so that a patent represents some invention that is new and has never been made before, the basic concept behind copyright isoriginality, so that a copyright represents something that has originated from a particular author and not fromanother. Copyrights, patents, and trademarks are all examples of what is known in the law as Intellectual Property.

As the media on which artistic and intellectual works are recorded have changed with time, copyright protection has been extended from the printing of text to many other means of recording original expressions. Besides books,stories, periodicals, poems, and other printed literary works, copyright may protect computer programs; musical compositions; song lyrics; dramas; dramatico-musical compositions; pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works;architectural works; written directions for pantomimes and choreographic works; motion pictures and other audiovisual works; and sound recordings.